Demography
Demography is the study of the change in the size, density, and composition of human populations over time, and includes analysis of such factors as birth rates and death rates, as well as emigration and immigration.
"The word ‘demography’ was first used in 1855 by a Belgian, Achille Guillard, and in his terms the study included many aspects of humans including general movement and progress (including morals) in civilized countries. He used the vital statistics of birth, marriage, sickness and death from census and registration reports" (reference for quote:Thomas A Ebert, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon, USA:Demographic Concepts in Encyclopedia of Life Sciences. Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.) in his book, Elements de statistique humaine ou demographie comparee. Demography has come to have a wider meaning, and is now used for all statistical descriptions of human life conditions, including illnesses, socioeconomic indicators, and other aspects of living conditions - as long as the statistics refer to the numbers of individual people who exhibit the characteristic in question.
Demographics in Medicine and the allied health sciences
Demographics in History
Demographics in social analysis:Criminology
Demographics in Marketing and business
References (notes)
FURTHER READING
- MALTHUS: AN ESSAY ON THE PRINCIPLE OF POPULATION. First Edition 1798. Revised and edited version: Malthus: An Essay on the Principle of Population (Cambridge Texts in the History of Political Thought) by T. R. Malthus and Donald Winch 1992 ISBN 9780521429726
- Demographic Methods and Concepts Donald T. Rowland 2003 ISBN 9780198752639
ACADEMIC JOURNALS SPECIALIZED IN DEMOGRAPHY:
Demography
Population Studies
American Demographics
Demographic Research
European Journal Of Population
Asia-Pacific Population Journal
The Turkish Journal Of Population Studies
ONLINE FREE BIBLIOGRAPHIC SEARCHABLE DATABASE (1986-2000) FROM PRINCETON UNIVERSITY: Population Index